Analysis of "The man he killed, reconciliation and dreamer" Among the poems chosen Thomas Hardy, Walter Whitman, and Siegfried Sassoon share a common view. Bad feelings, feeling buried deep inside the heart. Even though the mind is condensed due to distortion of war, flash of regret, a place to dream, there are still other reasonable minds. These poems represent hope and I hope war is not necessary. They show that men have to kill, so they kill.
The settlement comes from the Greek vocabulary based on Arasso. The general meaning of this expression is "change" or "exchange". The settlement involves changing the relationship between God and man. It assumes that the relationship has collapsed, but it has now changed from a state of hatred and division to a state of harmony and fellowship. In Romans 5: 6-11, before the reconciliation we were helpless, unbelievable, sinners and enemies, and we were told that we were angry with God (9 ). Change and settlement make us a new creature. "So, if someone is in Christ, he is a new creation, old things have disappeared and new ones have come!" (2 Corinthians 5: 17)
The settlement relates to the relationship between God and man. God reconciles the world with himself (2 Corinthians 5:18). The settlement happens through the cross of Christ or the death of Christ. In Corinthians 5: 18, "God makes us reconcile with God through Christ" (God 5: 1). Therefore, we are no longer enemies, they are unbelieving, sinners and helpless. Instead, God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that God has given us (Romans 5: 5). This is a change in the general condition of our lives.
According to the tradition of Pauline, in the 5th century AD, Augustine of Hippo regarded Christ as a New Testament mediator between God and man, and became a conqueror of sin. After the collapse of Adam, he believed that Christ is the reason and reason for the reconciliation of man and God, and saw the way of Christian salvation in Christ. By believing in Christ, Augustine believes that salvation will be provided to people who are worthy. In the 13th century, Thomas Aquinas aimed to regain Godfather's teachings about the Holy three role in the redemption economy. In the opinion of Aquinas, angels and humans were made from the beginning for salvation. For Aquinas, Christ's suffering pours grace of salvation and all its virtues beyond humanity.